Page 249 - Christie's Asia Week March 2024 Chinese Art
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IMPORTANT CHINESE ART INCLUDING THE COLLECTION OF DOROTHY TAPPER GOLDMAN                     重要中४藝術暨高曼珍藏



 The Property of a Gentleman  The Property of a Gentleman
 1136     1137
 A RARE BRONZE RITUAL WINE VESSEL, GONG  Gong can vary quite dramatically in the arrangement of the decoration.   A BRONZE RITUAL FOOD VESSEL, GUI
 LATE SHANG DYNASTY, 12TH CENTURY BC  On some, there are horizontal and vertical divisions created by vertical   WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, 10TH CENTURY BC
 The vessel is cast on the interior with an inscription reading: Fu [ ] Qian (Father   flanges on the body, such as the gong illustrated in The Complete   The interior of the vessel has a five-character inscription reading zuo Fu Yi
 [ ] Qian).  Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum - 27 - Bronze Ritual   bao gui (Precious gui made for Father Yi).
 8 in. (20.4 cm.) long  Vessels and Musical Instruments, Hong Kong, 2006, p. 140, no. 89,   10¬ in. (27 cm.) wide across handles
 while on others the decoration on the sides of the body is a direct
 $30,000-50,000  $30,000-50,000
 continuation of the animal on the cover, such as the example from
 PROVENANCE:  Xiaotun Locus North, at Yinxu, Anyang, Henan province included   PROVENANCE:
 Acquired in Tokyo in the early 1990s.  in the exhibition, The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology, National   Acquired in Hong Kong in the early 1990s.
 Gallery of Art, Washington and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art,
 Kansas City, 1999-2000, pp. 170-2, no. 49. In a few instances, such as
 The bronze gong is one of the wine vessel types that appeared during   the present gong, and an example, which retains its cover, in the Norton   Two very similar gui, in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, are
 the Anyang period of the Shang dynasty without being based on earlier   Gallery and School of Art, illustrated by M. Loehr, Ritual Vessels of   illustrated in Catalogue to the Special Exhibition of Grain Vessels
 ceramic prototypes, and by the middle of the Western Zhou dynasty it   Bronze Age China, The Asia Society, New York, 1960, no. 34, the   of the Shang and Chou Dynasties, Taipei, 1985, pp. 280-3, pls. 54-5,
 had disappeared. The shape of the vessel facilitated pouring the wine,   stylized body of the dragon continues down from the cover onto the   where they are dated middle Western Zhou dynasty. Other gui of
 while the cover sealed in warmth and kept out contaminants. These   vessel, which has additional zoomorphic designs arranged in quadrants.  similar proportions and with similar blunt-horned animal heads
 ritual wine vessels, with their fascinating zoomorphic imagery, share   decorating the handles, but with different bands of decoration below
 the same general shape, with some of rectangular form rather than the   ૈ♥珍藏  the rim, are illustrated by J. Rawson, Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes
 more graceful oval section of the present vessel, and have either the   晚商   Ռ元ע十̣ˠ紀   青銅   from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections, Washington, DC and
 head of a tiger or a dragon, and in a few instances a bovine, forming the   銘文:ḍƹ臤  Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1990, vol. IIB, pp. 380-9, nos. 42-4.
 front of the cover.  Ϝ源                                                           (inscription)
 1990年代׀Ն藏於東̺  ૈ♥珍藏
          西周   Ռ元ע十ˠ紀   青銅簋
          銘文:ηḍ̋寶簋
          Ϝ源
          1990年代׀Ն藏於香港







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